March 12, 2019 By David Bisson 2 min read

Security researchers have discovered that the new SLUB backdoor is receiving attack commands from GitHub and relying on Slack for communicating with its attackers.

Trend Micro detailed how this malware campaign began with watering hole attacks that redirected users to webpages hosting malicious code. The campaign proceeded with infection whenever these attacks caught someone with a machine that was not secured from CVE-2018-8174, a VBScript engine vulnerability patched by Microsoft back in May 2018.

Upon exploitation, the attack downloaded a dynamic-link library (DLL) and ran a PowerShell command. This process loaded a downloader that, in turn, downloaded and ran a second executable file containing the SLUB backdoor.

Detected as Backdoor.Win32.SLUB.A, the SLUB backdoor is a threat written in C++ that stands out for two reasons:

  • First, it embeds two authorization tokens to communicate with Slack’s application programming interface (API).
  • Second, it downloads a gist snippet from GitHub and parses it to search for commands.

The backdoor uses these two steps to post the result of its commands in a private Slack channel within a workspace using the embedded tokens. With this flow in place, digital attackers can use SLUB to take screen captures, create archive files and exfiltrate information.

The Ongoing Relevance of Watering Hole Attacks

This campaign isn’t the only recent operation to use watering hole attacks. For example, ESET detected one such campaign in November 2018, in which the OceanLotus group used watering hole attacks to target several websites in Southeast Asia. Several months later, ESET reported that the APT LuckyMouse group had preyed on the International Civil Aviation Organization using a watering hole attack.

These incidents illustrate how watering hole attacks pose an ongoing threat to organizations. Indeed, Carbon Black found that more than one-fifth (21 percent) of financial services companies had recently experienced this type of attack. Threat actors could use a successful attack in those cases to steal money and undermine customer trust in the financial institutions.

How to Defend Against Threats Like the SLUB Backdoor

Security professionals can defend against digital threats like the SLUB backdoor by using a layered security approach. This strategy should include machine learning and threat detection sandboxing to strengthen endpoint defenses against emerging threats, such as fileless malware.

Organizations should also practice risk-based vulnerability management to prioritize the software security flaws they should patch first.

More from

Third-party access: The overlooked risk to your data protection plan

2 min read - A recent IBM Cost of a Data Breach report reveals a startling statistic: Only 42% of companies discover breaches through their own security teams. This highlights a significant blind spot, especially when it comes to external partners and vendors.The financial stakes are steep. On average, a data breach affecting multiple environments costs a whopping $4.88 million. A major breach at a telecommunications provider in January 2023 served as a stark reminder of the risks associated with third-party relationships. In this…

Will arresting the National Public Data threat actor make a difference?

3 min read - The arrest of USDoD, the mastermind behind the colossal National Public Data breach, was a victory for law enforcement. It also raises some fundamental questions. Do arrests and takedowns truly deter cyberattacks? Or do they merely mark the end of one criminal’s chapter while others rise to take their place? As authorities continue to crack down on cyber criminals, the arrest of high-profile threat actors like USDoD reveals a deeper, more complex reality about the state of global cyber crime.…

What makes a trailblazer? Inspired by John Mulaney’s Dreamforce roast

4 min read - When you bring a comedian to offer a keynote address, you need to expect the unexpected.But it is a good bet that no one in the crowd at Salesforce’s Dreamforce conference expected John Mulaney to tell a crowd of thousands of tech trailblazers that they were, in fact, not trailblazers at all.“The fact that there are 45,000 ‘trailblazers’ here couldn’t devalue the title anymore,” Mulaney told the audience.Maybe it was meant as nothing more than a punch line, but Mulaney’s…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today